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Old 05-22-2008 | 02:57 PM
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Default Starving Self To Fend Off Jet Lag

So, how's your suprachiasmatic nucleus lately?

From Reuters:

Starving yourself before a long flight may help prevent jet lag, researchers said on Thursday.

Normally, the body's natural circadian clock in the brain dictates when to wake, eat and sleep, all in response to light. But it seems a second clock takes over when food is scarce, and manipulating this clock might help travelers adjust to new time zones, they said.

"A period of fasting with no food at all for about 16 hours is enough to engage this new clock," said Dr. Clifford Saper of Harvard Medical School, whose study appears in the journal Science.

He said a person from the United States traveling to Japan must adjust to a 11-hour time change.

"Because the body's clock can only shift a small amount each day, it takes the average person about a week to adjust to the new time zone. And, by then, it's often time to come home," Saper said in a statement.

Saper and colleagues knew that when food is scarce, animals are able to override their normal biological clock to improve their chances of finding food.

Studies have shown that mice fed only during the time when they normally sleep shift their body clocks to this new schedule. "They would be awake and alert and ready to go an hour or two before a meal was due to appear to have maximal chance of getting the food," Saper said in a telephone interview.

"This is built into the brain. The problem is, nobody knew how it worked," he said.

He and colleagues set out to find this mechanism. They used a group of mice that had been genetically engineered to lack a master gene called BMAL1 that regulates the body's clock. They put this gene into the shell of a hollowed-out virus that acted as a vector to deliver the gene only to brain cells they were interested in studying.

When they put it into a small region of the hypothalamus known as the suprachiasmatic nucleus, which serves as the body's primary clock, the mice adjusted to a light-based schedule for waking and sleeping, but not eating.

"If you don't wake them up they will starve to death," Saper said.

However, when they restored the gene only in a section of the hypothalamus called the dorsomedial nucleus, which helps organize waking and feeding schedules, the mice adjusted to the eating schedule, but not daylight.

Saper said when food is scarce, this second clock can override the body's primary clock. He said these same clock genes are known to be in all mammals, including humans.

While skipping meals ahead of a long flight or night shift has not been proven to work in humans, it may be worth a try.

"I'm certainly going to do it the next time I go to Japan," he said.
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Old 05-22-2008 | 03:36 PM
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Starve yourself? Sounds like a bad idea, plus it hasn't been proven. I think it would cause extreme fatigue.
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Old 05-22-2008 | 06:32 PM
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Originally Posted by flightfreak86
Starve yourself? Sounds like a bad idea, plus it hasn't been proven. I think it would cause extreme fatigue.
I agree, plus starving yourself will probably prevent you from sleeping very well too.

I stick to the tried and proven method that works for me: good diet, exercise and drink plenty of water. I avoid alcohol and limit my intake of caffeine.

Not scientific, but so far it seems to work very well for me.
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Old 08-09-2009 | 11:53 PM
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Default Starve Yourself To Fend Off Jet Lag

I am not a pilot, I am however a shift worker who works nights... in the last year I have been fasting on my last night shift to swing my sleep pattern back to normal the following day... it works well...

I am in charge of a shift where I work and continually am telling my story about how I have found a way to manage night shift... I wrote a short bit about it just for that reason.

Essentially, it does work... no doubt you will have experiment and find what works best for you, but it does work
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Old 08-10-2009 | 07:43 AM
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But what else is there to do on a long flight but eat?
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Old 08-10-2009 | 09:42 AM
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Originally Posted by Led Zep

I stick to the tried and proven method that works for me: good diet, exercise and drink plenty of water. I avoid alcohol and limit my intake of caffeine.

Not scientific, but so far it seems to work very well for me.

That's what I've done too, in fact I gave up caffeine completely last March and I'm sleeping great. I avoid alcohol during an international pairing (the horror, the horror!) and drink tons of water. All that's left to do is workout like a madman....which makes me tired.

While low/no calorie diets preceding an international flight could help shift the body clock, I think the low blood sugar issue would far outweigh the benefit for pilots.

Last edited by HSLD; 08-10-2009 at 07:23 PM.
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Old 08-10-2009 | 07:04 PM
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A long history of empirical evidence indicates that "sleep until you are hungry and eat until you are tired" works for many globe orbiting types. A workout or a couple of drinks are often used for self-medication under stressful conditions.
Length of layover is an important factor in adjustment and don't man your jet with low blood sugar.

The effect of "jetlag" seems to vary with the individual, but the real secret is being able to get sleep prior to flight or during a long flight.

Some of us can go 24 hours without food with little effect and some get weird after just four hours with nothing to eat. Some can drink three double expressos and then go to sleep and some will be kept awake all night. Lots of variance in the human animal, even the same animal on different days.
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Old 08-10-2009 | 10:27 PM
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For those interested in more on the topic and another take on it, look up the argonne diet.
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